Continued from "Intake of human slave material (4)".
Alongside parasites and pests, viruses and bacteria were among the greatest dangers of human merchandise becoming unusable all too quickly during the first phase of processing. Until they were sold on, there would be no time to pay special attention to the prisoners' bodily functions. For these reasons, the regulations of the slave trade company stipulated that the bodily excretions of freshly received human material had to be controlled at all costs. In order to effectively remove the bacteria-contaminated masses in a female's body, the processors used a special cleaning agent, which was mixed with water from a concentrate on site. The amount of cleaning fluid to be used had to be measured according to the body size and stature of the object to be cleaned. In the case of this specimen, it was just over two and a half liters. The processors, who themselves regularly received interior cleaning in smaller units for a few days, were sometimes amazed at the sheer amount of cleaning fluid they had to pour in, especially for larger objects.
Continued in "Intake of human slave material (6)".